10 Mass. App. Ct. 156 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1980
On February 2, 1979, the city of Lawrence advertised for sealed bids on a contract for the preparation of tax maps for its board of assessors. G. L. c. 40, § 4, thirteenth par. The project appears to have involved certain required work, including “ground control and photography, manuscript preparation from photography, aero triangulation, block bridging, calculations, research, platting of boundaries, final drafting of maps, data card production and other reproduction,” as well as optional work involving preparation of “Massachusetts coordinates for each lot,
The parties are in agreement on the essential facts outlined above. On these facts, the sole legal question addressed to the judge below and to us is whether the award of this contract was subject to the competitive bidding provisions of G. L. c. 30, § 39M, which requires that contracts for the “construction, reconstruction, alteration, remodeling or re
In context, § 39M applies only to contracts for the “construction, reconstruction, alteration, remodeling or repair of any public work.” That section was inserted by St. 1963, c. 842, § 1, which was entitled “An Act to require that all contracts for construction and for materials be awarded to the lowest responsible and eligible bidder, and to assure full competition in the taking of bids for such contracts” (emphasis supplied). A bill underlying that act, which was introduced under virtually the same title, initially used the term “construction work” rather than “public work” and referred in one of its clauses to the “architect” for the public agency inviting the bids. See 1963 Senate Doc. No. 563. Section 39M also requires competitive bidding on contracts for the purchase of any “material.” That term as used in the statute is defined in paragraph (e) as “any article, assembly, system, or any component part thereof”; and it “must be interpreted as referring only to materials used in the construction, alteration, or repair of any public work.” Gosselin’s Dairy, Inc. v. School Comm. of Holyoke, 348 Mass. 793 (1965). Section 39M also requires contracts written thereunder to provide for the substitution of an “item equal to that named or described in the . . . specifications,” i.e., “it is at least equal in quality, durability, appearance, strength and design” to the named item or “will perform at least equally the function imposed by the general design for the public work being contracted for or the material being purchased.” Id. at (b)(1) and (b)(2). The last sentence of paragraph (b) of § 39M requires that material specifications for public work contracts provide for “each item ... a minimum of three named brands of material or a description of material which can be met by a minimum of three manufacturers or producers.” Section 39N, which applies
The foregoing establishes to our satisfaction that § 39M is designed to obtain the lowest price that competition among reasonable bidders can secure for contracts involving the actual physical “construction” (including reconstruction, alteration, maintenance, remodeling or repair) of public buildings and improvements on land owned by the Commonwealth or one of its subdivisions, and contracts for the materials that typically go into such construction projects. Acceptance of the plaintiff’s interpretation of the statute — that any undertaking of any kind for a public purpose is a “public work” — would require us to blind ourselves to the entire statutory framework of c. 30, §§ 39A through 39P, just discussed, and would necessitate casting aside as surplusage the words “construction, reconstruction, alteration, remodeling or repair” in the first sentence of § 39M. Their interpretation would also render largely meaningless the references throughout § § 39A through 39P to matters commonly associated with building and construction projects such as the hiring of dump trucks, the need for architects and engineers to oversee the work, the requirement of security bonds, the procedures for prompt payment of subcontractors and materialmen, the provisions for equitable price adjustments for unanticipated site conditions, and the safeguards provided to ensure that the project’s structural com
Judgment affirmed.
That statute provides in relevant part: “Every contract for the construction, reconstruction, alteration, remodeling or repair of any public work,- or for the purchase of any material, as hereinafter defined, by the commonwealth, or political subdivision thereof, or by any county, city, town, district, or housing authority, and estimated by the awarding authority to cost more than five thousand dollars in the case of the commonwealth, or political subdivision thereof, and more than two thousand dollars in the case of any other such awarding authority, shall be awarded to the lowest responsible and eligible bidder on the basis of competitive bids publicly opened and read by such awarding authority forthwith upon expiration of the time for the filing thereof; provided, however, that such awarding authority may reject any and all bids, if it is in the public interest so to do.”
The plaintiffs’ reliance as stated in their brief is on that part of the definition of “public works” in Black’s Law Dictionary which reads as follows:
“Works, whether of construction or adaptation, undertaken and carried out by the national, state, or municipal authorities, and designed to subserve some purpose of public necessity, use, or convenience.”
From that definition they seem to argue that any project involving a public purpose is a “public work.” The quoted definition, however, although accurate enough, is only a part of the definition given in Black, bereft of its context. The quoted language appears as a subdivision of the word “Works,” which, in so far as material, is defined as “a building, structure, or erection of any kind upon land” (emphasis supplied). Black’s Law Dictionary 1781 (4th ed. rev. 1968). The language quoted by the plaintiffs follows, under the subheading “Public Works.” It is obvious, that the first of the words quoted, “works,” restricts the subsequent langauge to “a building, structure or erection . . . upon land.” See now Black’s Law Dictionary 1440 (5th ed. 1979). Maps hardly fit that definition. Similarly, Webster defines “public works” as “fixed works (as schools, highways, docks) constructed for public use or enjoyment . . . government sponsored public improvements (as parts or playgrounds)” (emphasis supplied). Webster’s Third New Inti. Dictionary 1836 (1971). Thus, both dictionary definitions restrict the term to things built on land, and those definitions are entitled to weight in construing the term. See G. L. c. 4, § 6, Third; Moy v. Jack Madden Ford Sales, Inc., 4 Mass. App. Ct. 102, 105 (1976). Cf. Commonwealth v. W. Barrington Co., 5 Mass. App. Ct. 416, 418-419 (1977).